The Cosmic Far-Infrared Background Buildup Since Redshift 2 at 70 and 160 microns in the COSMOS and GOODS fields
M. Jauzac, H. Dole, E. Le Floc'h, H. Aussel, K. Caputi, O. Ilbert,, M.Salvato, N. Bavouzet, A. Beelen, M. B\'ethermin, J.-P. Kneib, G. Lagache, and J.-L. Puget

TL;DR
This study measures the buildup of the Cosmic Far-Infrared Background since redshift 2 at 70 and 160 microns using deep infrared surveys, revealing most of the background originates at redshifts below 1 and constraining galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed redshift-dependent measurements of the CIB at 70 and 160 microns, constraining galaxy evolution models and the contribution of AGN to the far-IR background.
Findings
Most of the CIB at 70 and 160 microns is emitted at z < 1.
The contribution of AGN to the CIB is less than 10% at z < 1.5.
Models predicting a peak at higher redshifts are inconsistent with the data.
Abstract
The Cosmic Far-Infrared Background (CIB) at wavelengths around 160 {\mu}m corresponds to the peak intensity of the whole Extragalactic Background Light, which is being measured with increasing accuracy. However, the build up of the CIB emission as a function of redshift, is still not well known. Our goal is to measure the CIB history at 70 {\mu}m and 160 {\mu}m at different redshifts, and provide constraints for infrared galaxy evolution models. We use complete deep Spitzer 24 {\mu}m catalogs down to about 80 {\mu}Jy, with spectroscopic and photometric redshifts identifications, from the GOODS and COSMOS deep infrared surveys covering 2 square degrees total. After cleaning the Spitzer/MIPS 70 {\mu}m and 160 {\mu}m maps from detected sources, we stacked the far-IR images at the positions of the 24 {\mu}m sources in different redshift bins. We measured the contribution of each stacked…
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